Are you saying that an argument can have the correct logical form, but the premises can be false, and the conclusion false? Absolutely. — PhilosophyRunner
1. Worms and rats come out of the ground when it rains.
2. It rained.
3. Worms and rats are created by rain. — Shawn
As I understand your OP (correct me if I misunderstand), you are wondering why more posts on this forum are not about logic form. — PhilosophyRunner
I think the reason is because the main disagreements are about the premises as per the point you were trying to make with the rat example. — PhilosophyRunner
There is a lot more to explore with regards to premises, than with regards to logical form. — PhilosophyRunner
Not necessarily. It's simply an issue of too few people actually putting in the effort to make their arguments in logical form such as syllogistic logic or even symbolic logic... — Shawn
And for the arguments about the premises, I don't see what help logical form will give. In your example above, if I disagree it is raining, then we will have a discussion about justification to say it is raining, that has nothing to do with the above logical form in your previous post. — PhilosophyRunner
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